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Plexiglass over a metal rail anyday!!!!

Looking at pictures the real thing is a lot less noticeable than in the 3D viewer. In practice you barely notice that the plexiglass is there

Plexiglass over an "OBSTRUCTED VIEW" rail for sure!!!

I remember sitting in Shea Stadium in the upper deck in the 1st row (Fireworks night), and that ephen rail was the BIGGEST nuisance going!!!!!!!
I HATED THAT EPHEN RAIL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I'm a big hockey fan as well, and I never thought I was missing out, when I sat in good seats, and had to look through the plexiglass, during the entire game.

I bet a rail is "cheaper" than having plexiglass, which is why Fredo Wilpon installed rails instead....

From the pictures that I've seen of both stadiums, I truly believe that NYS will look much, much better than Shiti Field...
To me, Shiti Field looks like a "no frills" new ballpark.

1. I LOVED PNC Park!!! (My favorite new stadium)
2. I love Camden Yards...
3. I liked CBP in Philly...
4. I liked Turner Field in Atlanta...
5. Wasn't that impressed with Jacob's Field... The entire left field side from homeplate to the foul pole, above field level and below the upper deck was ENTIRELY of luxury boxes! With a GIANT glassed in restaurant ending by the luxury suites. Jacob's Field is my least favorite among the new ballparks that I've been to.

Hopefully for Muts fans, Shiti Field will be somewhere between Camden Yards and Jacob's Field...
From what I've seen so far, Jacob's Field looks better!!!!!!!

Yankees want us to pay for fancy johns

Less than three years after they got $942 million in tax-free bonds for a new Bronx stadium, the Yankees are at the public trough again.

With our city facing the worst financial crisis since the Depression, and more than 200,000 people expected to lose their jobs by the end of the year, baseball's richest team wants another $260 million in tax-free bonds to help cover a stadium cost overrun of $370 million.

Even worse, the city's Industrial Development Agency, which Mayor Bloomberg controls, is set to approve the bonds next week.

The itemized list of extra stadium costs that city officials released this week is truly astounding.

There's $137million to pay for concessions at the new stadium - including a swank new Yankees Steakhouse, a Hard Rock Cafe, a museum and a conference center. The Yankees added most of those items to the stadium budget after the city approved the original financing plan.

The financial details that the team submitted list such a complicated split between public and private funding for those costs that it's almost impossible to separate them.

"This is bizarre," said Assemblyman Richard Brodsky (D-Westchester), a longtime critic of the stadium deal. "We don't have enough money for our schools or the subways, yet they want to give the Yankees money for a steakhouse and granite ramps?"

Brodsky joined Assemblyman Jim Brennan (D-Brooklyn) to call an emergency public hearing for Wednesday to review the Yankees' new request.

Team officials, it seems, are sparing no expense to make this the most luxurious, high-tech structure ever imagined. They have a perfect right to splurge in any way they wish - with their own money. When they're getting a tax break, it's another matter.

This is a team, after all, that just doled out $435 million to sign three ballplayers, Mark Teixeira, CC Sabathia and A.J. Burnett.

All you have to do is look at what the Mets are doing with their new stadium in Queens to see the outlandishness of the Yankee request.

Yes, the Mets also want some $80million in additional funding for their new Citi Field, but there are some big differences.

The City Council authorized the Mets to use that money, but the team never borrowed the full amount. The cost of Citi Field, including parking facilities, has increased by only about 15% above original projections - to a total of $700million.

Yankee Stadium, on the other hand, has zoomed from an original price tag of $800 million in 2005 to $1.3 billion today.

And that's not counting the Yankee parking garages, which are being built by a separate nonprofit. They also have jumped in price to more than $340million.

The Mets are in the same town and are using the same unionized labor force. Yet Yankee Stadium will end up costing about twice as much as Citi Field.

The Mets long ago reached a deal with the city for a split of revenues from the sale of memorabilia from publicly owned Shea Stadium.

The Yankees are still bickering over how much money they will get from souvenir sales from the old Yankee Stadium. They have plans to make a financial killing on everything from stadium seats to infield dirt to pieces of stadium facade.

No matter how you slice it, the Yankees have shown themselves to be more greedy, more arrogant and more wasteful than the Mets.

They do not need, nor do they deserve, more subsidies.

Bloomberg keeps telling ordinary New Yorkers we need to tighten our belts in hard times. He needs to tell it to the Yankees.

Less than three years after they got $942 million in tax-free bonds for a new Bronx stadium, the Yankees are at the public trough again.

With our city facing the worst financial crisis since the Depression, and more than 200,000 people expected to lose their jobs by the end of the year, baseball's richest team wants another $260 million in tax-free bonds to help cover a stadium cost overrun of $370 million.

Even worse, the city's Industrial Development Agency, which Mayor Bloomberg controls, is set to approve the bonds next week.

The itemized list of extra stadium costs that city officials released this week is truly astounding.

Sensationalist junk news reporting. The Yankees pay for the Bonds, not the city. They write anything to sell a paper

The Yankees have hired a division of a prominent Manhattan residential real estate brokerage, Prudential Douglas Elliman, to help sell some of their prime real estate: unsold premium seats and luxury boxes at the new Yankee Stadium.

When somebody needs to sell something and can't move it they usually lower the price, but if the Yankees do that now the parties that have already paid up are going to want a rebate. Sounds like maybe there's going to be some deflation in the luxury baseball fan market.

I think the Yankees are starting to realize they made a big mistake building this new stadium. What a shame; all that history lost forever, millions of fans left out in the cold, and the money isn't even coming in like they planned. I wonder what people 100 years from now will be saying about this era in Yankees history.

That it was a very expensive era to be a Yankee fan. Someday, maybe soon, the financial structure of this sport is going to get a nasty dose of reality. I can afford to pay 8.50 for a lousy light beer and 5.00 for a hot dog on occasion, but I won't. When I take the kids we eat before, we eat after, but I would feel like a sucker if I let myself get gouged like that. I don't think they regret building the stadium, but they may end up regretting some of the player contracts they've handed out.

Yankee pricing my take

I guess I am in the minority, but I honestly don't feel that the Yankees pricing is so crazy. I was able to get season tickets just 7 rows from the field in section 109 for $100 each. Paying $200 a game for two seats in a brand new, state of the art facility, 7 rows from the field with the aisle, seems very reasonable to me.

The $2500 pricing that people keep referring to is for a very limited amount of seats. The legends section is mostly $500 tickets but that does come with a ton of amenities including private entrance, private luxury bars and dining located just steps away from there seats, parking, and the best seats in the house.

There are 22 million people in the tri state area. There are literally thousands of wealthy business owners and employees that live locally. The Yankees only need a few hundred customers that can afford paying for the legends seats, the suites, and all the luxury that comes with it. They are not asking the average fan to pay $500, $750, $2500, $500,000, etc. They are asking the multimillionaire business owners, celebrities, etc. The majority of the 54K plus seats in stadium are being sold are reasonable prices for the average fan.

Personally I can't wait until opening day to enjoy the benefits of a beautiful New Yankee Stadium!

"At the Yankees’ 52,325-seat stadium, the team has sold 24,564 full season-ticket packages, up from 19,400 last year. By combining full and partial packages, the team said it has sold the equivalent of 39,393 full season tickets."

"At the Yankees’ 52,325-seat stadium, the team has sold 24,564 full season-ticket packages, up from 19,400 last year. By combining full and partial packages, the team said it has sold the equivalent of 39,393 full season tickets."

Gordon is there a chance the yankees will sell out every home game this year?
We know over 39,000 tickets are sold for Full STH& partial plans leaving 12,000 tickets left.

I think the question fans really want to know is if "affordable" seats are going to be sold out, and I'm pretty sure they will be. You should be able to walk up any time and buy $400-$1250 seats to any non-premium game (opener, red sox, mets, old timers). But that doesn't mean you won't be able to get tickets, since I think all the people that bought season tickets on impulse will have a lot of extra tickets to sell and there's going to be a lot of supply on the secondary market. You'll be able to get tickets, just not from the Yankees or ticketmaster office (thank god)

I think the question fans really want to know is if "affordable" seats are going to be sold out, and I'm pretty sure they will be. You should be able to walk up any time and buy $400-$1250 seats to any non-premium game (opener, red sox, mets, old timers). But that doesn't mean you won't be able to get tickets, since I think all the people that bought season tickets on impulse will have a lot of extra tickets to sell and there's going to be a lot of supply on the secondary market. You'll be able to get tickets, just not from the Yankees or ticketmaster office (thank god)

I would imagine they will have a stub hub booth like they added outside of RYS . . at some point it may be hard to tell who you are actually buying from - it will become like a commodities market. (Imagine buying futures on Yankees tickets?)